Results for 'Art exhibition audiences'

998 found
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  1.  17
    The Shogun Age Exhibition.Ronald M. Bernier & Tokugawa Art Museum - 1985 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 105 (4):773.
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  2.  89
    Art's detour: A clash of aesthetic theories.S. K. Wertz - 2010 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 44 (1):pp. 100-106.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Art's DetourA Clash of Aesthetic TheoriesS. K. Wertz (bio)Both John Dewey1 and Martin Heidegger2 thought that art's audience had to take a detour in order to appreciate or understand a work of art. They wrote about this around the same time (mid-1930s) and independently of one another, so this similar circumstance in the history of aesthetics is unusual since they come from very different philosophical traditions. What was it (...)
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  3. Jeremy Smith [Catalog of the Exhibition Held at] Fischer Fine Art Ltd., London, 6 February-9 March 1979 [and] Mira Godard Gallery, Toronto, 28 April-19 May 1979.Jeremy Smith & Ont Fischer Fine Art Limited - 1979 - [Fischer Fine Art Ltd.,].
     
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  4.  96
    Immaterial: Rules in Contemporary Art.Sherri Irvin - 2022 - Oxford University Press.
    Contemporary art can seem chaotic: it may be made of toilet paper, candies you can eat, or meat that is thrown out after each exhibition. Some works fill a room with obsessively fabricated objects, while others purport to include only concepts, thoughts, or language. Immaterial argues that, despite these unruly appearances, making rules is a key part of what many contemporary artists do when they make their works, and these rules can explain disparate developments in installation art, conceptual art, (...)
  5.  56
    Art and Bioethics: Shifts in Understanding Across Genres. [REVIEW]Paul Ulhas Macneill & Bronaċ Ferran - 2011 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 8 (1):71-85.
    This paper describes and discusses overlapping interests and concerns of art and bioethics and suggests that bioethics would benefit from opening to contributions from the arts. There is a description of recent events in bioethics that have included art, and trends in art that relate to bioethics. The paper outlines art exhibits and performances within two major international bioethics congress programs alongside a discussion of the work of leading hybrid and bio artists who experiment with material (including their own bodies) (...)
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  6.  7
    Diller & Scofidio : scanning.Aaron Diller + Scofidio, K. Michael Betsky, Laurie Hays, Anderson & Whitney Museum of American Art - 2003
    Accompanying an exhibition organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, this book is the most comprehensive catalogue on the work of this internationally recognized architectural firm.
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  7.  14
    Ecologies: Mark Dion, Peter Fend, Dan Peterman.Mark Dion, Peter Fend, Dan Peterman, Stephanie Smith & David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art - 2001 - University of Chicago David & Alfred.
    Since the 1960s, many artists have incorporated ecological concerns into their work, an endeavor that has required new strategies in art-making. To explore recent American manifestations of these interests, the David and Alfred Smart Museum commissioned new projects from artists Mark Dion, Peter Fend, and Dan Peterman, each focusing on interrelationships between particular organisms—human beings-and a specific group of sites—a museum building, a river landscape, and a university campus. The results, exhibited at the Smart Museum during the summer of 2000, (...)
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  8.  11
    Public Art: Monuments, Memorials, and Earthworks.Gary Shapiro - 2022 - In Jonathan Gilmore & Lydia Goehr (eds.), A Companion to Arthur C. Danto. Hoboken, NJ, USA: Wiley. pp. 363–372.
    Danto's discussion of site‐related and site‐specific art opens up perspectives on both his conception of the ethics and politics of public art and on his ultimately idealistic ontology of art. Danto's analysis of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial involves an important distinction between monuments and memorials that is highly relevant to current controversies, like those about Confederate statues. His differing responses to two site‐related public art works by Richard Serra exhibit a nuanced sensibility to the taste of the public audience and (...)
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  9.  12
    Art-at-Work: Moving beyond, with the histories of education and art in Aotearoa New Zealand.Victoria O’Sullivan & Janita Craw - 2016 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 48 (7):711-728.
    This article reports on Art-at-Work, a twenty-four-hour exhibition that took place on Auckland University of Technology’s North Shore campus on 17 July 2013. The passing away of progressive educator Elwyn S. Richardson was the catalyst for this project that emerged simultaneously alongside the Elwyn S. Richardson symposium, Revisiting the early world. Researching the history of progressive education, and its relationship to art, in Aotearoa/new Zealand created an opportunity to enact a relational curatorial approach to art-centred research in education. Artworks, (...)
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  10.  9
    Junk art: The art that needs to be understood – Autoethnographic perspective.Karolina Żyniewicz - 2020 - Technoetic Arts 18 (2):113-124.
    Thierry Bardini, in his book titled Junkware, proposed that the apt name for contemporary art would be junk art. He stressed the significant change taking place in art: that the narration and explanatory discourse run by an artist is more important than the visual outcome of the project. According to the knowledge from STS (especially Bruno Latour’s writing), knowledge production is based on multilevel translations. Art based on science can be seen as a kind of translation as well. The production (...)
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  11.  24
    Art as Performance (review).Michael Weh - 2005 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 39 (2):114-118.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Art as PerformanceMichael WehArt As Performance, by David Davies. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2004, 278 pp.If we accepted the claims that David Davies makes in his Art as Performance, we would have to rigorously revise our conception of what kinds of entities artworks are. Art as Performance is a study in the ontology of art, and whereas other well-known theories about the ontological status of artworks say that artworks are (...)
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  12.  20
    Meta-reference in media arts and the interactive instantiation of non-digital artworks.Raivo Kelomees - 2017 - Technoetic Arts 15 (3):353-372.
    The aim of this article is to analyse interactive reinterpretations of two of Raul Meel’s artworks. They were created after the original works were made; they reference the original artworks and are meta-referential. These reinterpretations allow the original artworks to be opened and explained and become instantiations of their algorithmic content. The questions that arise in this article are as follows: how can physical artworks be opened up for audiences by means of interactive emulations? How can this serve to (...)
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  13. Authenticity, Misunderstanding, and Institutional Responsibility in Contemporary Art.Sherri Irvin - 2019 - British Journal of Aesthetics 59 (3):273-288.
    This paper addresses two questions about audience misunderstandings of contemporary art. First, what is the institution’s responsibility to prevent predictable misunderstandings about the nature of a contemporary artwork, and how should this responsibility be balanced against other considerations? Second, can an institution ever be justified in intentionally mounting an inauthentic display of an artwork, given that such displays are likely to mislead? I will argue that while the institution has a defeasible responsibility to mount authentic displays, this is not always (...)
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  14.  3
    Rousseau and dignity: art serving humanity.Julia V. Douthwaite (ed.) - 2017 - Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press.
    Rousseau and Dignity is a volume that combines a photography exhibit, lectures, commentary, and audience reactions by people ages seven to ninety-two, all for Jean-Jacques Rousseau's tercentennial.
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  15. Mirrors of the soul and mirrors of the brain? The expression of emotions as the subject of art and science.Machiel Keestra - 2014 - In Gary Schwartz (ed.), Emotions. Pain and pleasure in Dutch painting of the Golden Age. nai010 publishers. pp. 81-92.
    Is it not surprising that we look with so much pleasure and emotion at works of art that were made thousands of years ago? Works depicting people we do not know, people whose backgrounds are usually a mystery to us, who lived in a very different society and time and who, moreover, have been ‘frozen’ by the artist in a very deliberate pose. It was the Classical Greek philosopher Aristotle who observed in his Poetics that people could apparently be moved (...)
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  16. Art and audience.Nick Zangwill - 1999 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 57 (3):315-332.
    D0 works 0f an essentially involve a relation t0 an audience'? Many otherwise very different theories of art agree than they do. S0 the question ‘Wha1 is art?" has no be answered by describing than relation. I shall argue 10 the ccmmrary [hm a theory of wha; ir is m be art should nm invoke any relacicm m an audience. Art has nothing esscmial to do with an audience.
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  17.  27
    On Art Exhibitions.Georg Simmel - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (1):87-92.
    This early essay by Georg Simmel, first published in 1890, reflects on some sociological features of the phenomenon of the art exhibition in European culture at the end of the nineteenth century. The text presents Simmel's judgement at this time – in some respects negative, in other respects positive – of the consequences of the juxtaposition of multiple visual objects within definite temporary institutional spaces for future artistic production, organisation and reception. Particularly notable in the text are some themes (...)
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  18.  4
    On Some Novel Encounters with Fine Arts. Where to Search for Aesthetics and Where Aesthetics May Have Something to (Re)search.Zoltán Somhegyi - 2020 - Espes. The Slovak Journal of Aesthetics 9 (2):23-31.
    In this paper, I examine some of the various ways, spaces, and situations in which one can currently encounter aesthetic content and have an aesthetic experience. By focusing on examples coming from the world of fine arts, my survey will tackle a double question: I will try to investigate where to search for aesthetics and where aesthetics may have something to search. Considering the novel forms of art presentation that are related to the spread of alternative exhibition spaces, I (...)
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  19.  66
    Art and audience.Raymond Durgnat - 1970 - British Journal of Aesthetics 10 (1):11-24.
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  20.  45
    Field, coherence and connectedness: Models, methodologies and actions for flowing moistmedia art.Carlos Augusto Moreira da Nóbrega Nóbrega) & Maria Luiza P. Guimarães Fragoso Fragoso) - 2015 - Technoetic Arts 13 (1-2):153-168.
    This article introduces practical and theoretical investigations in fields of art and technology related to biotelematics, hybridization and transcultural experimentation based on research carried out over the last four years at the Nucleus of Art and New Organisms (NANO). We will approach this subject by considering three main points of view: field theory (Ascott 1980; Nóbrega 2009); the concept of coherence (Ho 1993; Ho & Popp 1989; Simondon 1980); and the state of connectedness (Ascott 2006). These will act as integrative (...)
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  21.  37
    Good work and aesthetic education: William Morris, the arts and crafts movement, and beyond.Jeffrey Petts - 2008 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 42 (1):30-45.
    A notion of "good work," derived from William Morris and the Arts and Crafts Movement but also part of a wider tradition in philosophy (associated with pragmatism and Everyday Aesthetics) understanding the global significance of, and opportunities for, aesthetic experience, grounds both art making and appreciation in the organization of labor generally. Only good work, which can be characterized as "authentic" or as unalienated conditions of production and reception, allows the arts to thrive. While Arts and Crafts sometimes promotes a (...)
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  22.  56
    Pragmatist aesthetics and new visions of the contemporary art museum: The Tate modern and the baltic centre for contemporary art.Angela Marsh - 2004 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 38 (3):91-106.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Pragmatist Aesthetics and New Visions of the Contemporary Art Museum:The Tate Modern and the Baltic Centre for Contemporary ArtAngela Marsh (bio)John Dewey mandated the repositioning of our experience of art within the realm of the everyday, and recognized the importance of art objects principally with regard to how they operate within an experience as "carriers of meaning."1 In this quote from Art as Experience, Dewey illustrates the segue between (...)
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  23.  21
    Pragmatist Aesthetics and New Visions of the Contemporary Art Museum: The Tate Modern and the Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art.Angela Marsh - 2004 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 38 (3):91.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Pragmatist Aesthetics and New Visions of the Contemporary Art Museum:The Tate Modern and the Baltic Centre for Contemporary ArtAngela Marsh (bio)John Dewey mandated the repositioning of our experience of art within the realm of the everyday, and recognized the importance of art objects principally with regard to how they operate within an experience as "carriers of meaning."1 In this quote from Art as Experience, Dewey illustrates the segue between (...)
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  24.  44
    A philosophical inquiry into the nature of computer art.Holle Humphries - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (1):13-31.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.1 (2003) 13-31 [Access article in PDF] A Philosophical Inquiry into the Nature of Computer Art Holle Humphries Before the computer is accepted unquestioningly as a legitimate artistic medium, some of the challenging aesthetic and philosophical issues raised by [computer art] must be solved. The most haunting questions concern the impact of the technology on the artist, the creative process, and the nature of (...)
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  25.  18
    A Philosophical Inquiry into the Nature of Computer Art.Holle Humphries - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (1):13.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.1 (2003) 13-31 [Access article in PDF] A Philosophical Inquiry into the Nature of Computer Art Holle Humphries Before the computer is accepted unquestioningly as a legitimate artistic medium, some of the challenging aesthetic and philosophical issues raised by [computer art] must be solved. The most haunting questions concern the impact of the technology on the artist, the creative process, and the nature of (...)
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  26.  26
    Symposium: The future of the art museum: Curatorial and educational perspectives: Introduction.Daniel A. Siedell - 2007 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 41 (2):1-4.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Symposium: The Future of the Art Museum: Curatorial and Educational Perspectives:IntroductionDaniel A. SiedellIntroductionThere are few futures pondered more often than the art museum's. The new millennium has spawned a veritable cottage industry of such prognostication. Most of it has occurred from the perspectives of building expansion, audience growth, and collection development. These are not, by any means, unimportant considerations. However, such sustained attention to them by directors, marketers, board (...)
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  27.  4
    Mutual exchange of art exhibitions between China and the Soviet Union in the mid-twentieth century.Jie Bai - forthcoming - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal).
    This article mainly outlines and explores the art exhibitions held between China and the Soviet Union during the founding of the People's Republic of China. The author examines in detail such aspects of the topic as mutual exchanges of art exhibitions between China and the Soviet Union since the founding of the People's Republic of China. Particular attention is paid to the political background against which the evolution in Chinese art took place, as well as the legacy of Soviet realist (...)
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  28.  25
    Unifying the curriculum with an art exhibition:.Terry Michael Barrett - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (3):21-40.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.3 (2003) 21-40 [Access article in PDF] Unifying the Curriculum with an Art Exhibition:In the American Grain Terry Barrett This is an account of a whole-school faculty designing and teaching a five-month whole-school curriculum based on an exhibit of modern American art, In the American Grain, in a public school in the Pacific Northwest, grades 6-12. This account is a case-study of a (...)
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  29.  20
    Unifying the Curriculum with an Art Exhibition: In the American Grain.Terry Michael Barrett - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (3):21.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.3 (2003) 21-40 [Access article in PDF] Unifying the Curriculum with an Art Exhibition:In the American Grain Terry Barrett This is an account of a whole-school faculty designing and teaching a five-month whole-school curriculum based on an exhibit of modern American art, In the American Grain, in a public school in the Pacific Northwest, grades 6-12. This account is a case-study of a (...)
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  30.  23
    Introduction to Georg Simmel’s Essay ‘On Art Exhibitions’.Austin Harrington - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (1):83-85.
    This introduction to Georg Simmel’s essay ‘On Art Exhibitions’ sketches the context and relevance of some striking points of commonality to Walter Benjamin’s much better-known ‘The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction’ of 1936, as well as to Simmel’s own subsequent essay on ‘The Metropolis and Mental Life’ of 1903. The introduction is followed by a complete English translation.
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  31.  7
    The ethical challenges of recovering historical memory seeing land: Resituating landscapes through contemporary indigenous art exhibitions.Carmen Robertson - 2019 - Les Ateliers de l'Éthique / the Ethics Forum 14 (2):108-127.
    Canadian landscapes on gallery walls in art museums serve as a primer for understanding the nation. Visitors cannot easily escape the purposeful emptiness of rugged scenes meant to visually assure them of the nation’s right to colonial possession. Most viewers respond positively to these pretty pictures because such ways of seeing the art history of Canada has been naturalized and normalized, appearing politically neutral.Ubiquitous Canadian landscape paintings also reinforce colonial claiming of land and authorize erasure of Indigenous relations with the (...)
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  32.  5
    How the Visitors’ Cognitive Engagement Is Driven (but Not Dictated) by the Visibility and Co-visibility of Art Exhibits.Jakub Krukar & Ruth Conroy Dalton - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  33. Artistic actions for sustainability in contemporary art exhibition.Ásthildur Jónsdóttir & Chrystalla Antoniou - 2018 - In Inger J. Birkeland (ed.), Cultural sustainability and the nature-culture interface: livelihoods, policies, and methodologies. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, earthscan from Routledge.
     
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  34.  15
    Toward an Instructional Design for Art Exhibitions.Benjamin E. Braverman - 1988 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 22 (3):85.
  35.  7
    Letter to the Editor: "Chinese Art: Exhibition, Artist Unrelated Issues".Curtis L. Carter - unknown
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  36. "The Expanding World of Art 1874-1902": Vol. I, "Universal Expositions and State-Sponsored Fine Arts Exhibitions": Edited by Elizabeth Gilmore Holt. [REVIEW]Colin Trodd - 1989 - British Journal of Aesthetics 29 (3):288.
     
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  37. Art and the educated audience.James O. Young - 2010 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 44 (3):29-42.
    When writing about art, aestheticians tend to focus on the work of art and on the artist who produces it. When they refer to audiences, they typically speak only of the effect that the artwork has on its audience. Aestheticians pay little, if any, attention to the important active role that an audience plays in the workings of a healthy art world. My goal in this essay is to do something to end the neglect of the audience. I will (...)
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  38.  13
    Art and the Educated Audience.James O. Young - 2010 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 44 (3):29.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Art and the Educated AudienceJames O. Young (bio)1. IntroductionWhen writing about art, aestheticians tend to focus on the work of art and on the artist who produces it. When they refer to audiences, they typically speak only of the effect that the artwork has on its audience. Aestheticians pay little, if any, attention to the important active role that an audience plays in the workings of a healthy (...)
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  39.  4
    An Art-Sociological Implication in the Cultural Theory of P. Bourdieu- Focusing on the Salon Exhibitions and Indépendants -. 안현정 - 2015 - 동서철학연구(Dong Seo Cheol Hak Yeon Gu; Studies in Philosophy East-West) 78:547-572.
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  40.  24
    Installation Art and Exhibitions: Sharing Ground.Eleen M. Deprez - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (3):345-350.
    Discussions of installation art often develop out of an analysis of its similarities and differences to other art forms. Doing so helps to ground it into critical engagement we are well familiar with. In this paper I take a different approach. I look at installation art in relation to a cognate practice not ordinarily understood as art-making: that of exhibition-making. We will see that this comparison is illuminating since installation art and exhibitions have two kinds of meaning-bearing properties in (...)
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  41.  25
    Framing people’s justice.Aude Bertrand-Hoettcke & Matthias Kettner - 2022 - Zeitschrift für Ästhetik Und Allgemeine Kunstwissenschaft 67 (2):76-100.
    The large-scale painting ›People’s Justice‹, a work by the artist collective Taring Padi, originally intended as an agit-prop artwork in Indonesia two decades ago, was publicly exhibited in Kassel in 2022 at the international art exhibition ›documenta fifteen‹. Public criticism declared the large-scale image to be an anti-Semitic machination and scandalized the art exhibition as a whole as marked by anti-Semitic activism. Taring Padi’s large-scale painting was first covered, then completely removed. – In our paper, we analyze the (...)
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  42.  2
    Family Pictures: A Philosopher Explores the Familiar.Laura Duhan Kaplan & Laura Kaplan - 1998 - Chicago, Ill.: Open Court Publishing.
    This series of intimate snapshots of family life shows how the ordinary journey through marriage, maturity, and parenting is fraught with extraordinary questions about ethics, knowledge, and metaphysics. Humorous and poignant depictions of family members are presented in the context of classical philosophical questions. The reality of family life brings these questions down to earth, while the author's imaginative use of philosophy deepens the reader's understanding of what is at stake for an individual enclosed in the sphere of the family. (...)
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  43. Why exhibit works of art?Ananda K. Coomaraswamy - 1941 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 1 (2/3):27-41.
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  44. For an Audience: A Philosophy of the Performing Arts.Paul Thom - 1993 - Temple University Press.
    This is an examination of the criteria for identifying, evaluating, and appreciating art forms that require performance for their full realization. Unlike his contemporaries, Paul Thom concentrates on an analytical approach to evaluating music, drama, and dance. Separating performance art into its various elements enables Thom to study its nature and determine essential features and their relationships. Throughout the book, he debates traditional thought in numerous areas of the performing arts. He argues, for example, against the invisibility of the performer (...)
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  45.  26
    The Art of Authority: Exhibits, Exhibit-Makers, and the Contest for Scientific Status in the American Museum of Natural History, 1920–1940.Victoria Cain - 2011 - Science in Context 24 (2):215-238.
    ArgumentIn the 1920s and 1930s, the growing importance of habitat dioramas at the American Museum of Natural History forced staff members to reconsider what counted as scientific practice and knowledge. Exhibit-makers pressed for more scientific authority, citing their extensive and direct observations of nature in the field. The museum's curators, concerned about their own eroding status, dismissed this bid for authority, declaring that older traditions of lay observation were no longer legitimate. By the 1940s, changes inside and outside the museum (...)
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  46.  5
    “The Art of Writing Posthumous Papers”: Kierkegaard and the Spectral Audience.Juan Valls Boix - 2017 - Avant: Trends in Interdisciplinary Studies 8 (2):51-62.
    The aim of this article is to develop a postmetaphysical conception of reading by following Kierkegaard’s Either/Or Part I (1843) through such Derridian concepts as secret, hospitality, and spectrality. The work focuses on the three essays addressed to the Symparanekromenoi (“the community of the dead”), a fellowship neither young nor old with an aphoristic way of life (2010b, pp. 137–225) that can be understood as a figure of alterity. Special attention is paid to paratextual features of the book: the texts (...)
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  47. Why Exhibit Works of Art?Ananda K. Coomaraswamy - 1944 - Philosophy 19 (73):176-176.
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  48. Audience, Words, and Art: Studies in Seventeenth-Century French Rhetoric.Hugh M. Davidson - 1968 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 1 (3):184-185.
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  49. Museum exhibition as a work of art and a subject of.Jerzy Swiecimski - 1976 - Analecta Husserliana 4:165-186.
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  50.  15
    Art, Audience and Understanding: the Case of Dance.Graham McFee - 2003 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 15 (27-28).
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